Free Press Article - Protests Mentioned!

Discussion in 'Justice for JonBenet Discussion - Public Forum' started by VP, May 16, 2004.

  1. JustChillun

    JustChillun Member

    well, why not...

    ...e-mail Nelson publishing (or everyone on their e-mail roster within the co.) with a hyperlink to this website. A separate e-mail to their CEO with a suggestion that we wouldn't want to buy another Nelson published book without really knowing, this sent from a different source/address than the first, and ask them if they contributed...but wait, isn't that info supposed to be some sort of publically available item, who contributes to whom, and how much? This isn't the same Nelson that publishes so many Bibles, is it?
     
  2. Spade

    Spade Member

    Nelson Publishing

    "Sam Moore - CNP President, Executive Committee (1984-85, 1988, 1996, 1998, 1999); Board of Governors (1996). CEO/President, Thomas Nelson Publishers, the largest and one of the oldest Bible publishers in the world and also a leading publisher of religious books. In 1982, they acquired Dodd Mead Co. of New York and Everest House."

    "Charles Moore - CNP Membership Directory (1984-85]. Vice President of Thomas Nelson. Brother of Sam Moore, President of Thomas Nelson Publishers. [Rhodes-Milner Round Table: Thomas Nelson"

    CNP= Council for National Policy

    I suggest everyone do a Google on the Council for National Policy. They are an offshoot of the John Birch Society and VERY powerful in the Republican party.
     
  3. Watching You

    Watching You Superior Bee Admin

    Candy must not have seen the IMO in your post, Spade.

    She says you are lying about this.

    Goodgawdamighty.
     
  4. Ginja

    Ginja Member

    Candy...

    ...will say anyone who says anything against the Ramseys is a liar. This isn't news...it's status quo for her.
     
  5. Spade

    Spade Member

    From ABC

    Vast, Right-Wing Cabal?
    Meet the Most Powerful Conservative Group You've Never Heard Of
    By Marc J. Ambinder

    W A S H I N G T O N, May 2
    — When Steve Baldwin, the executive director of an organization with the stale-as-old-bread name of the Council for National Policy, boasts that "we control everything in the world," he is only half-kidding.

    Half-kidding, because the council doesn't really control the world. The staff of about eight, working in a modern office building in Fairfax, Va., isn't even enough for a real full-court basketball game. But also half-serious because the council has deservedly attained the reputation for conceiving and promoting the ideas of many who in fact do want to control everything in the world.

    For many liberals, the 22-year-old council is very dangerous and dangerously secretive, and has fueled conspiratorial antipathy. The group wants to be the conservative version of the Council on Foreign Relations, but to some, CNP members — among the brightest lights of the hard right — are up to no good.
     
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